Parole officers affiliated with the Indiana Department of Correction (IDOC) have created a partnership with the Indianapolis police department on a new community reentry program for high-risk state prison parolees. The program is called INPACT. It connects high-risk parolees with community resources, such as housing, jobs, and transportation. For the program, an on-site IDOC parole officer is stationed at each police district in Indianapolis, to give officers information about where each parolee lives. The police help link the parolee to community resources.

The program was developed by the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, the Department of Metropolitan Development . . .

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Correctional Health Care, Reentry & Diversion Services

The corrections health care, re-entry, and diversion market is defined as the provision of medical and behavioural health services to the incarcerated, services to ease the transition back into the community, and diversion services related to decreasing or avoiding jail time for certain offences. The corrections market faces a number of challenges including the high number of individuals with serious mental illness, an increasingly female population, providing adequate care, and helping former inmates adapt and succeed in the community.


In November 2025, Correctional Health Services, which provides medical and behavioral health treatment at the Los Angeles County jails, implemented a new policy for buprenorphine for opioid use disorder that restricts how physicians prescribe the medication, according to a recent news report. Under the new policy, priority for medication assisted treatment (MAT) for opioid use disorder is given to people when they first enter the jail system. Those who accept buprenorphine MAT on intake receive… Read